Internalization of Dectin-1 terminates induction of inflammatory responses.
journal article
Hernanz-Falcón P, Joffre O, Williams DL, Reis e Sousa C.
Eur J Immunol. 2009 Feb;39(2):507-13.
Dectin-1 is a pattern-recognition receptor recognizing beta-(1,3)-glucans found on fungal cell walls. Dectin-1 plays an important role in immunity to fungi by mediating phagocytic clearance of fungal particles and inducing transcription of innate response genes. We show here that the two processes are linked and that Dectin-1 signalling for inflammation is attenuated by phagocytosis. Blocking Dectin-1 ligand-dependent internalization using either actin polymerization or dynamin inhibitors, large non-phagocytosable beta-glucan particles or poorly phagocytic cells leads in all cases to enhanced and sustained activation of downstream signalling pathways and culminates in production of high levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines. These findings establish the importance of phagocytosis not only in the clearance of pathogens, but also in the modulation of pattern-recognition receptor signalling and strongly suggest that internalization is the first step to attenuation of Dectin-1-mediated pro-inflammatory responses.
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2699426/?tool=pubmed
Pub Med: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19130473
created over 15 years ago (10 December 2009) last modified over 13 years ago (28 September 2011)  [ RDF ]  [ RelFinder ]